View allAll Photos Tagged Shells
Picture taken 11/27/25
Shell/truenorth | 5567 Wilson Mills Rd, Highland Heights, OH
Please contact me via FlickrMail, or on Gmail if you'd like to use any of my photographs.
retaimings@gmail.com
Shells made from white chocolate, then brushed in various lustre dusts. Pearls made from gumpaste, and I used brown sugar for sand.
Hi all...hope you all had a great day...
I took this down in Sandymount about 4pm one cold Monday in January on my little Sony Camera
I love my Sony Nex5 camera the quality is super and its great when
I don't want to bring my big camera out with me...
Anyway as always Many thanks for your visits and your kind comments,Favs
and invites...they mean a lot o me....
Be Happy...Be Well...And be Safe my friends.......
Just a little thought for ye all
" Learn from the mistakes of others.
You can't live long enough to make them all yourself " ~ ~Unknown ~ ~
How cool is that :-) :-)
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Midday at the dock, mollusk shells atached to the rocks, Xcalac, Quintana Roo, Mexico. March 2017. ©Eduardo Mendoza.
I was in the right place at the right time to catch this shot of the interior of the Weld Boathouse in Cambridge. It is definitely not open to the public. Loved the look of all these sleek racing shells, resting in place with just a peak of the Charles River out the door.
27 Jan - photo a day 2016.
This shell was purchased during our first trip to New Zealand.
Haliotis iris, common name paua, blackfoot paua or rainbow abalone, is a species of edible sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Haliotidae, the abalones.
This species is endemic to New Zealand Blackfoot paua is the largest abalone species found in New Zealand. It is most commonly found in shallow cool waters at depths less than 6 m. These sea snails often form large clusters on open, exposed coasts, where drift seaweed accumulates and there is good water movement. Blackfoot paua grow to about 180 mm in shell width.
© Mike Broome 2016
This was the final shot at the end of the roll so it had some light leak. I like the effect though.
Film stock: Reflx Lab Pro 100
ISO: 100
Format: 120
Camera: Bronica ECTL
Lens: Nikkor-P 75mm 1:2.8 + extension tubes
Digitised: camera scan
Developer: C41 @ Sydney Super8 Photo Lab
6th December 2025: Karcher Klean!Star IQ car wash at Shell Winchester, during installation in December 2025.
Shell Bay, Poole Harbour, Dorset, England, UK.
Please contact me to arrange the use of any of my images. They are copyright, all rights reserved.
Taken in Clifton, Ohio.
Clifton is a very small rural town of 151 people (2018) who's major attraction is the Mill run by a water wheel on the Little Miami River. At the mill, the river (more of a stream at that point) drops into Clifton Gorge which is an amazing place to see. The land around is almost table top flat and all of a sudden, there is this beautiful gorge you wouldn't expect to be there and can't see from the road even though it is only a few yards away in many places.
There are a few out buildings around the mill that are covered with old signs like this one. During Christmas time, the entire grounds of the mill are decorated with lights. I've seen all the lights and decorations during the day, but never at night. Apparently it is a very well attended attraction. .
shell edited with textures
New website----> www.sylviacookart.com
Experimenting with some "art" from the sea. I need some new prints for the walls...I've picked up shells for as long as I can remember....from coast to coast...and sea to sea:) I believe these were from Sarasota, Florida...the Gulf of Mexico.
While we're on gas pumps, I happened to remember this old shot from a bike tour many years ago. Pre digital days, the photo was most likely taken with one of the small Olympus clam shell cameras.
(photo taken by my old buddy Calvin)
Shell Oil Company logo was design by Raymond Loewy and it is still one of the best-known logo designs. Shell logo has been continually corrected for several times. This sign is one of the olders version found it in Cambridge, Massachuset. ------ (BOS_DSCN2219 - Image copyrighted).
I took this photo at the beach. One shell was fould on the beach and the other is from Pottery barn. I placed them between the rocks and the waves would roll in . I was hoping to get some bokeh off the water, which I did but also had to run after the shells when the waves took them away. But it was fun!!
The "I wish I was at the beach, but instead I'm photographing shells in my bedroom on blue paper" series. #1
This is a teensy starfish...it's actually sitting inside another shell :)
Used coffeeshop's butterscotch vintage action
Recently my son found this shell in our garden and wanted me to take a picture of it (he knows that I like to take pictures of bugs, insects, weird objects etc). So, I thought of giving it a try even though this shell is damaged (left lower corner) and not in perfect shape. After many permutations and combinations, I zeroed on capturing it against the light coming from the window. So, I placed it on a white paper on the window ledge.The light entered through the shell aperture/mouth and made it glow (kind of). So, I took this glowing concept a bit further and processed it such that the glow was enhanced a bit. It is a very minimalistic shot but somehow the end result is quite OK.
Shot this with my Sigma 70-300 lens which doubles up as a decent macro lens between 200-300mm. My experience with this lens has been mixed as it goes very soft beyond 200mm. But since I don't have a dedicated macro lens, this lens comes in handy at times.
My Macros and Flowers set.
Looking down from Eddy St. as P&W local PR-3 performs a few switch moves at the Shell (ex Motiva) racks pulling one load and spotting one empty tank.
The cool blue waters of Providence Harbor and upper Narragansett Bay are visible in the background.
The 2 mile long Harbor Junction Running Track and it's connection the South Harbor Track (the line peeling off to the right i. the foreground) are both owned by the City of Providence and served exclusively by the P&W accessed from Cranston Yard off the Amtrak Northeast Corridor Mainline.
2008, an EMD GP38-2 built new for the railroad in December 1980 has spent its entire almost four decade career working the rails of Southern New England and is very much at home here.
Providence, Rhode Island
Thursday January 9, 2020